jVsicnJ tuval. Ashes asd Kiqht-Soil. Which is preferable for garden, bleached ashes or ache just as they come from the stover l or the garden unbleached ashes are the best; especially if a horse manure and cow dang have to be employed. Tne soil of the garden suffers a heavy Iohs of potash in the removal of all root crops, as asparagus, celery, cabbage, and the like which ashes are adapted to supply. They are also excellent as an insect-killer when dusted on plants attacked by caterpillars, slags, or aphids as they not only rhoke, but caatenza tbese vermin. When this office is served they reach the "oil with advantage as top dressing. They are also useful in promoting chemical change in the too inert organic matter of old garden soil, and where the garden hat been heavily and exclusively manured with stable manure for years and has become black and mucky;a good done of atbes well mixed with the soil often operate as beneficially as a renewed manuring of the usual kind. The ashes and seed should not come too near each other. Tbere may be several "best ways" of applying night soil to gardens, according to circumstances. One of them, and on all accounts perhaps the very best, is to apply it by irritation. Night soil, containing necessarily mncti urine, decomposes in warm weather with extraordinary rapidity, and unless it is used fresh or nearly so the best of it cannot be used at alh Convenience requires either that it be dried by the eartii-clonet system or diluted with bath and kitchen-slop and applied as a drench. Dry earth is not competent to save the nitrogen of night-soil, as Dr. Voelcker has lately shown, and as I had ascertained some three years ago by my own analysis. If the night soil and other house-slops are received into a tight cistern situated in the garden the contents can be pumped up and dis tributed when and where they are wanted by hose, by drain pipes, or by casks on wheels with the most complete economy of all the fertilizing matters, and with no annoyance worth naming. Thb Out thk Fbcit. If this im portant matter has not already been at tended to, it should be done without delay. There is no excellence without labor and care, and this is particularly true of fruit growing. Daily vigilance is indispensably requisite iu order to insure success. In horticulture, sound judgment is required, and nerve sufficient to execute its commands. When the time arrives for thinning out fruit, it must be done. We know that excessive production is always at the expense of both quantity and quality, and often results in seriously impairing the vitality of the tree. One-half the trees which bear fruit every year would be benefited by one-half of the fruit taken off as soon as it is well set; and the overbearing of a tree will in a few years destroy it. But it requires courage to thin out fruit as much as it should be. As a rule, the fruit should be thinned out so that, when fully grown they will not touch each other. Indeed, it would be still better to thin out pencil es so that the distance between them should be from two to four inches. In the latter case the result will be that what fiuit is allowed to remain on will be of large size, and usually of fine color, and will commaml a ready sale in market at high and remunerative figures. In no instance is fruit so good when the tree or plant is overloaded, nor will it attain its proper size. The price ob tained is always much less, the cus tomers diseatistied, and your trres euiTer therefrom. Gkajtixo Trees. If you have un productive fruit trees or those which yield poor kinds of fruit, regraft them with better kinds at once. Graft a por tion of the tree each year for three years, beginning with the highest centre branches. This will make the lower branches grow thrifty, and prepare them for grafting. Iu this way you will, in a very short time, change "the unproductive, unprofitable tree, to a beautifully symmetrical one bearing every year an improved and desirable quality of fruit. Even old trees, many times, may be grafted profitably. In pNuting trees to till up vacant spaces :u your orchard, plant only the best km In, ue only the most thrifty stock you can obtain, and the result will then bo satisfactory. A Wbiteb in the Boston Cultivator finds that most of the so called strained honey sold in bottles is composed as follows : Cane or sugar is melted in a decoction of slippery elm bark in water. Some ruai ufactnrers ue, instead of elm, a solution of gum arabic and star, h, to give it consistency and save sustar; tut this last does utt re semble honey so much when dropped, as it lacks the stringy appearance. These mixtures with or without the ad dition of a little cheap Cuban honey, are flavored with essence, and the mess is ready for sale. The best way to ob tain real honey is to Lny it with the comb. To Make Crrnxos Gr.ovr. A cor respondent of the Western farmer says: I used to have a great deal ot trouble to make currant and gooseberry cuttings or slips grow, uutil I tried the following plan: I boiled some potatoes until they were very nearly done, and then stuck one on each slip and put it in the ground. Every slip sprouted and grew well all summer, with one or two exceptions. The idea of putting the boiled potatoes to the end of cuttings was to furnish and keep moisture enough for them to grow until the roots become large enough to gather this moisture and substance from the sou. To make a nest egg, take an ordinary hen's egg, break a small hole in the small end, about f of an inch in diameter, extract the contents, and after it is thoroughly clear inside, fill it with powered slacked lime, tamping it m order to mate it contain as much as possible. After it is full, seal it up with plaster of Paris, and you have a nest egg which cannot be distinguished by the hen from the other ecus, and one which will not crack (like other eggs) by being frozen. It is said that two teaspoon fuls of nitrate of potassa to two gallon of rain water, sprinkled over the currant bushes twice day for few days will effiect nally rid the bushes of the currant worms. For the potato bug, the same remedy is effectual, having this ad vantage over other "eradicators," that it is harmless to plants really an ad vantage. To ctbe leg weakness in chickens.a cor respondent of the Prairie Farmer gives each of the chickens from three to eight grains of citrate of iron daily, and a due supply of nutritious food care being taken to select such substances as are flesh producing, and no fattening wheat, barley, and due supply of worms, or in default, some chopped raw meat. Fattk.viso Pocxtrt. Coop up poul try to fatten, and they will do well up to twelve or fourteen days. Keep them in the coops beyond that time, and feed them as much as you like, they will grow leaner every day, until they grow into skinful of bones and die. Among feathered creatures.the eagle, the raven, the swan and parrot are cen tenarians. On tha Thames they annu ally "nick" the swans of the " Vintners' Company," under whose keeping they have been for five centuries, and find some swans have lived one hundred and fifty years. Scientific. Theobt of Coitets. Prof. Xewtoa, of Yale College, delivered a lecture on the 9 h of March last before the Shef field Scientific School on Bielas' Comet The Professor gives the history of the comet from its discovery one hundred and two years ago, to its destruction, lie says the nucleus of the comet was of a hard substance stone in fact, and that it cracked to pieces on its near approach to the sun. bnowera ot meteors seen from the earth were the result of the dissolution ot the comet. The grand meteoric display of Novem ber, 1872, is attributed to this cause. The Professor says "a nieteoroid is a small comet, not having, however, the comet's tail." As to the material of which the comet was composed, and we suppose of which all comets are composed, the Professor says : At some time, probably in the historic aires, it came near the hnge planet Jupiter. When it had gone out of his reach it had just momentum enough left to go arouud the sun in its preseut orbit of 6 years. It went away from Jupiter an entire and single comet. As it came near the sun, his burning heat acting upon the cold rocky body of the comet cracked off and scattered in every direction email anirular bits. At the same time a very thin vapor, shining by its own light, was set free. To this vapor both comet and snn had an un accountable repulsion. It was driven off first by the comet every way. Bat soon that which was sent towards the sun was driven back again, and it went streaming off into space to form the comet's tail, a process ably set forth by Prof. Norton. So here we have the theory that comets are composed of rocky meteoric substanse, that they move slowly when comparatively far distant from the sun. that their motion is accelerated as they approach the sun, and that the tail is caused by the heat of the sun acting npon the material of which the comet is composed. And further, that meteoric showers may be attributed to the dis solution of comets. Black Leading ok Ibox. In these days of general diffusion of chemical knowledge, it is scarcely necessary to state that the "black lead" or "plum bago" of commerce is not lead at ail, or any compound of lead, that it includes no lead whatever in its composition. Neither is it a carburet of iron, as is sometimes stated. It is simply carbon ; pure plumbago is pure carbon, impure plumbago is impure carbon. Its proper name is graphite, that is, writing Btone. I may venture to describe- it as the softest of all true solids, and have often pondered wonderingly upon the appar ently unnoticed, but very curious chemico-mechanical, paradox that the hardest and softest of all the solids existing upon this earth are, chemically speaking, the same substance : graphite and the diamond, being both carbon. It is this wonderful softness, com bined with persistent solidity, that enables us to smear it over any other solid surface, and thus obtain a solid paint, all body and no medium. For the class cf cstisgs to which it is com monly applied, fehere its application can be readily repeated, and where it is cot exposed to the direct action of water, it is unrivaled as a protecting film to iron. Its chemical action, so far as it does act when cold, is reducing or anti-oxidising. Its color and tone are so similar to iron that Mr. Buskin himself could scarcely make any aMthe tic objections to its use, and the film is so marvclously thin that it obliterates nothing. I have never met with any attempt to estimate the thickness of a well brushed film of graphite, but I suspect that, if a hundred strata of sncb films could be piled in contact with each other, their combined thick ness would fall short of that of the thinnetit gold leaf. All the ingredients of corn, accord ing to Leconte, may be utilized. The grain is, in the first place, to be satu rated with a solution of caustic soda in large cisterns, and transferred to cylin drical sieves; then dipped in water, and ground in connection with a con tinuous stream of pure, or somewhat cjuatie water. The quantity of soda, dejieuding on its quality, the oily con tents of the grain, and the temperature, should be such as to saponify the oil of the grain while allowing the starch to appear solid and firm. The liquid as it leaves the mill, passes over sieges, on which the genua, hulls, etc, are re tained, while the starch and soap pass through, and flow over large, iuciined surfaces, upon which the starch settles and the dilute soap solution collects in cisterns. The starch is then washed with pnre water iu cisterns, again passed through sieves iuto cisterns, allowed to settle twenty-four hours and, after drawing off the supernatant liquid, re moved and dried. Excellent soap may be obtained from the dilute solution, and the germs, etc., can be utilized in paper manufacture. Ozosiso Air. An easy way of ozon ing the air of a sick-room, as described in a German periodical, consists in the use of a powder composed of peroxide of manganese, permanganate- of potash, and oxalic acid, which has the property of giving out, in contact with water, an abundant qnantity of ozone. For a chamber of middling size it is sufficient to use about two tablespoonfuls of the power, over which are poured from one to one and a half tablespoonfuls of water every two hours. In this way the quantity of ozone produced is ex actly what is wanted ; the presence of a larger quantity in the air would occa sion irritation of the throat and cough ing. All metals, except gold and platinum, must be removed, ou account of the oxidizing effects of the ozone. Fossils of the Departed. A Ger man inventor, Dr. Von Steinfels, seems to have hit a happy medium for dispos ing of the dead, which is at least free from the objections urged against burial, while it does no violence to the feelings which naturally shrink from destroying by fire the corpse of a be loved frieiid. It is proposed to place the body in a sarcophagus made of stone, and to pack around the corpse artificial stone or cement in s plastic state, Tha latter being allowed to harden, the remains become like a fossil embedded in the solid rock, and, if need be, the deceased hods his grave and his monument in one and the same A sew method of joining gas pipes has been perfected. Instead of the usual projecting end, the pipes have creases or channels around them. hen placed in contact, end to end, a strip of sole lead is bound about them, and pressed tightly against the pipes by wrought iron ring. The advantages claimed are that the pipes are lighter and more easily cast ; less lead is re quired to make the joint tight ; no heat is required for applving it : it is quickly done ; and especially that the joint is somewhat elastic, and will last much longer in soft ground, or when heavily loaded. SorrEjrrjro VioLis Notes. A writer in Let Monde, states that the disagree able rasping tone peculiar to some violins may be avoided by placing a small strip of wax on the upper portion of the bridge. The notes are immedi ately rendered sweet and soft, mod can be suited to the ear by regulating the aiss of the piece of wax. Domestic. How P lasts Purity th Air. Plants gain their nourishment by the absorption, through their roots, of cer tain substances from the soil, and by the decomposition through their green portions, of a particular gas contained in the atmosphere carbonic-acid gas. They decompose this gas into carbon, which they assimilate, and oxygen, which they reject. Now, this phe nomenon, which is the vegetable's mode of respiration, can only be accomplished with the assistance of solar light. Charles Bonnet, of Geneva, who be gan his career by experimenting on plants, and left this attractive subject to devote hsmself to philosophy, only in consequence of serious affection of his sight, was the first to detect this joint work, about tb middle of the eighteenth century. He remarked that vegetables grow vertically, and tend toward the sun, in whatever position the seed may have been planted in the earth. He proved the generality of the fact that, in dark places, plants always turn toward the point whence light comes. He discovered, too, that plants immersed in water release bubbles of gas under the influence of sunlight In 1771, Priestley, in England, tried another experiment. Ha let a candle burn in a confined space till the light went out, that is, uutil the contained air grew unfit for combustion. Then he placed the green parU of a fresh plaut in the enclosure, and at the end of ten days the air had become suffi ciently puriSed to permit the relighting of the candle. Thud he proved that plants replace gas made impure by combustion with a combustible gas. Boiled Wheat, Excellent dishes for breakfast, dinner or supper can be made from unground wheat boiled. The freshest and cleanest wheat, with the plumpest kernels, should be selected. The white and the amber-colored wheats cook the most readily, and they are also preferable on account of having a thinner skin. Time is saved, in pick ing it over, to have it first run through a smut machine and then washed, thongh the cooking over is indispensa ble. Put it to boil with five or six parts water to one of wheat, by measure. Cover close, and after it begins to boil set it where it will barely simmer. Cook it four or five hours, or until the kernels mash readily between the thumb and finger. Hard wheat of any kind will require still more time, and some kinds may be cooked all day without softening. When done it should be even full of water or juice, which thickens aud be comes gelatinous ou cooking. Salt and send to the table warm, to eat with meats and vegetables at dinner. It can also be eaten by itself, trimmed with sugar or batter, or both, or syrup, or milk. It moulds nioely, and may be served cold at breakfast or supper, or it may be steamed up and served hot at breakfast. The long cooking it requires, of course precludes its beiog served fresh at that meal. After it has once cooled, however, it cannot be made so soft and liquid as at first by any sub sequent cooking. Like other starch, when it once sets it loses its liquidity. Light WrrnocT Matches. To obtain light instantly withont the use of matches and without the danger of setting things afire, take an oblong phial of the whitest and clearest glass ; put iuto a piece of phosphorus about the size of a pea, upon which pour some olive oil, heated to the boiling point, filling the phial about one-third full and then seal the phial hermetically. To use it, remove the cork and allow the air to enter the phial, and then re cork it. The empty space in the bottle will then become luminous, and the light obtained will be equal to that of a lamp. As soon as the light grows weak its powers can be increased by opening the phial and allowing a fresh supply of air to enter. In winter it is sometimes necessary to heat the phial between the bands to increase the fluidity of the oil. Thus prepared the phial may be used for six months. This contrivance is now used by the watch men of Paris in all magazines where ex plosive or inflammable materials are used. ToIIato Batter Cake. The season for that highly esteemed vegetable, the tomato, being at hand, we take occasion to recommend mode of serving them, and which, after trial, we ca pro nounce excellent. It is to slice them, when ripe, cover them with batter, aud fry on a griddle, like other oakes. They should be seasoned while frying. Large and solid tomatoes are the best for l! s dish. Those who are fond of tomatoes will take new delight in them fried ia this way for breakfast ; and we lielieve that many who have not fancied them in the old styles o f serving, will find them most palatable in this way. Fricassee of Cold Boast Beef. Cut the beef into very thin slices, season it with a little pepper and salt, shred a bunch of parsley very small, cut an onion into pieces, and put all together into a stewpan with a piece of butter and three-quarters of a pint of good broth. Let it all simmer slowly, then stir in the yolks of two well-beaten eggs, a teaspoon! ul of vinegar, or the juice of a lemon, and a wiue glass of port wine. Stir it briskly over the fire, and turn the fricassee into a hot dish. If the flavor of shalot is liked, the dish can be previously rubbed with one. Blackberry Wine. Put the berries in a larga tub ; to every gallon of hemes pour one pint of boiling water. Bruise them with a mallet, and let them remain until next day. Strain through a thick cloth. To every gallon of juice add two and a half pounds of sugar. Drain again and put into a cask ; cover the bung with muslin ; put it in a cool place, bliake the cask daily until fer mentation ceases ; cork it tight, and by September it will be ready for use, but improve with age. This recipe has been followed for ten years and never failed. To Cook Onions. The strong dis agreeable taste and smell of onions may be in a large measure removed by leaving them to soak in cold salt water for an hour after the outside skin has been removed ; then boil them in milk and water till thoroughly tender ; lay in a deep dish, season with pepper and salt, and pour over them some melted butter. Thb Fellow Crab-Apple is a very ornamental tree when in blossom, and also when loaded with golden fruit. It is very productive, and the fruit is valuable. The Large Bed is not so showy, but the fruit is equal to the foregoing. The Small Bed is equally beautiful in blossom or in fruit, but tbe'fruit is not equal to the others. Lxxos Cake. One teacup butter, three teacups sugar; rub them to a cream, and stir in the yolks of five eggs well beaten; one teaspoon soda ; one cup milk ; the juice and grated peel of one lemon, the whites of five eggs, and sift in, as lightly as possible, four and one-half cups flour. Bake in shallow pans half aa hour. How to Remote Stains fbom Steel Knives. The very best way to clean a stained steel knife, is to cut a solid potato in two, dip one of the pieces in brick-dust (such as in usually used in knife-cleaning), and rub the blade with it. Humorous. Pat ' Brlea tm Den n U O KafJVrf j. Ob, Denala, m- hrwy, I'm weary of hf-, 1 nor l-h a turouttl" wid biiiuv, m at. fcbea rnllo do rmckin f rum uurtun Ull Eight. And sea war, tul uie lac Uiat aba wul hcT th riflit. And nim a Hitch of th work will ah k ; Iu tH nam of at. Hatnck bow will I gm through t For what wid the ban Da, tuc cow and the 11. There's aiver itttui time L f t me OI !.. There poor Johnttr ToH, who lie Uoer heer. Him wife will be sheriff for aura the mat year. Aud tie has g-oue crazy, clean out of hi- htwi. lie uiver get aculeey any more uu hie bed. H re Tin tia .ingtn the weary night Iocs. Vomeue' UighU! Woman.1 Rlg.t i ia lUe balk of Lie em(. And mver a whit do-a he know of hi wain. Of cuurc he wul tanteu to knock out their brain. Sow, Dennia, me boy, you're a warm Irian heart. Hora -JOd oo solatlou to me will impart ; but 1 know yoo will way. as a matter of cooree, 1 must part wul my biddy and go a uivoorc. Now, Dennl, when yon write again (It bonule ladle- naeliin. Ju.t leave your clumsy broraee home. Or toe j . aught be einasliiit, Your, fjriver, Par O'Brum. Snrixo Up With Heb. She was ex pecting him Sunday night ; the parlor curtains were down ; the old folks notified that it was healthy to go to bed at eight o'clock, and Johnay bribed with a cent to permit himself to be tucked away at sundown. Ha sneaked up the path, one eye on the dog and the other watching for the "old man," who didn't like him aDy too well, gave faint knock at the door, and it was opened, aud he was escorted to the parlor. He said he couldn't stay but a minute, though he didn't mean to go home for hours. She wanted to know how his mother was ; if his father had returned from York State ; if his brother Bill's rheumatism was any better ; and he went over and sat down on the sofa so as not to strain his voice. Then, conversation flagged ami he played with his hat, aud she nibbled on the sofa tidy. He finally said it was a beautirul evening, and she replied that her father had predicted a snow storm. He said he guessed it wouldn't snow, as the moon was not crooked enough to hang a powder horn on the end, and she said she didn't lielieve it would either. This mutual understanding seemed to give them both courage, and then he wanted to know if she had seen Bill Jonea latelr. She hadu't, she said, and the didn't war.t to. Then they went on talking about the donation vihit which was to be given ifore long to Elder B.-rry, aud Le carelessly dropped his riht baud ou her nis right hand, while his left arm sneaked along the sofa and got behind her shoulders. She pretended nt to notice it, and he looked down at his boots, and wanted to know if she thought mutton tallow rotted out boots faster than lard aud lamp black;. She couldn't say, but she had an idea that it did. He had just commenced to hook liDjrers with her, when she discovered that something ailed the Limp ; she rose tip and turned the light down a half mak ing the room look dim. It took him five minutes to get hold of her fingers again, and she pretended tJ want to draw her hand away all the time. After a long pause he lowered his voice to a whisper, and said he didn't see what made folks love each other. She bit her handkerchief and admitted her ignorance. He said he could ncnie a dozen yonng men who were going to get married right away, and his left arm fell down and gave her a hng. Then be went over and looked out of the window, to make sure that it was or was not going to snow, and, coming back, he turued the light down a little more, and then sat down and w.tuted to know if she didn't waat to iet her self by leanine her head ou hia shoulder. Ah, me ! We Lave all bttu there, and who of us cared a cent when the old clock struck twelve, aud we five miles from home ? The old muu was fast asleep, the watch dog gone a visit ing, and the handsomest girl in the country didu't see why we need be in a hurry. Perhaps I shouldn't have written of this, but as I was going by Saunders' the other day, thinking of the iiii-ht I heard him whisper in her ear at spelling school, that he'd love her shadow as long as he lived, Le raided the window and called to her, as she was picking up chips iu the road : "Sue Saunders, come iu here aod find the b'ar's grease for my sore heel, or I'll break t very bone in your body." Boston has at least one very polite car conductor. A paper of that city says : Ou a Highlaud car, early lat evening, jut as the conductor was about collecting his fares, a lady started up and rang the Ik-11. The conductor uaturally ttepcd forward, to receive her ticket as she was about to get out. "Oh ! sir," she said, "I've forgotten my pocket book, and I wa going to get out aud walk." "There is no iicecsaity for that, madam," politely &&id the couductor ; "be seated." Several gentlemen oflVred the lady a ticket. She accepted one and proffered it to the couductor. ''Keep it, madam," Le said ; "you will need it to ride home with." "My deak, where is my Morning and Evening Devotion ?" affced Mr. Paul Partington meaning a small book with that title, in which he sometimes read. "Here it is," said Mrs. Partington, producing from the closet a dark bottle and setting it on the table with a clean glass. "Here it is, Paul." He looked intently into her face to see if malice were actuating her ; but he found there all calmly serene. He would not de stroy the pleasure of her satisfaction in having thus obliged him, so he refrained from explanation, and partook. It is hard to understand why the following advertisement should have been published in the Witness, of Montreal, a daily religious journal : "If the lady who took my black silk umbrella out of Miss Clendinning's store, Kadegonde street, will call at 47 Aletfalie, she can have my parasol also. "A Paislet manufacturer got, by some accident, a severe cut across the nose, and having no court-plaster at hand. stuck on his unfortunate organ one of his gum tickets, on which was the usual intimation : "Warranted three hundred and fifty yards long." "Neveb marry for wealth," says a contemporary, ''but remember that it is just as eay to love a girl who has a brick house, with a Mansard roof and a silver-plated door bell, as one who hasn't anything but an auburn head and an amiable disposition." "That dog of yourn flew at me this morning, and bit me on the leg, and I notify you that I intend to shoot it the first time I see it." "The dog is not mad." "I know he's not mad. What has he got to be mad about ! It's me that's mad.' Bectob's Wife "And what's your father, my boy?" Boy "My father's a 'hagitator,' an' he says he won't have me learnt no Catechism, 'r else you'll all of yer 'ear ov it !" Punch. "Ton ought to lay up something for a rainy day," said an anxious father to his profligate sou. "Anil so I have," replied the youth. "What?"' "An umbrella." A wtdoweb compares marriage to a besieged fortress. Those who are out side would like to be within and those who are within would lik to be with ont. Now kind your P's and Q's that is to say your peas and q-cumbers. IVIiscelJany. Discovert us t'omets. As the method used by astronomers in discovering comets is unknown to the general public, a short description may be of iuterest. In making the ob servations a small telescope called a comet seeker, so mounted as to be readily moved in any direction,! used. After decidiu? in what part of the heavens to observe, which is usually iu the neighborhood of the equator, al though any part of the heavens may be used for coiueta appear in all parts he carefully looks throiijrb. the instru ment, at the same time slowly moving it in any desired direction, and watches the stars a they pas. After sweeping a certain distance he elevates the tele scope, so as to include a spare of the heavensalove that previously scanned. Backward aud forwards the comet seeker is iiioved.raisiiij; the instrument on each return so as not to waste time in looking over the same path. In these observations he soon may notice, besides the stars, a faint white cloudy patch. He has now found eithera neb ula or a comet. If his instrument is properly adjusted, he reads the jrradu atioii of the two circles attached to the telesvoie, taking also the time of his clock, and from litem he approximately knows the object's position. If the comet seeker is not iu adjustment, he must then observe tliroutrti the equa torial telescope, which is always so. Having thus determined the nebula or comet's place, he looks over a cata logue of nebula.', ia which are arranged the posit iou of ull known. The two lierschels published such a catalogue, containing a list of 5,o?0, the result of twelve years of observations. If anv nebula is found iu the catalogue having the same position as the one seen iu the telescope, the objects are probably identical; but if none ia recorded, the following observations are made; A micrometer is attached to the telescope to measure the distance of the prob able comet from two or more ot the brightest stars seen iu the instrument, and if necessary a draw ing is made of their relative positions that these stars may be recognized. After a few hours these measurement are repeated, and if there is any difference between them the object has moved and it must con sequently be a comet; but if there is no motion, it is a nebula. By referring to a catalogue of fixed stars, the positiou of the stars used iu these lucasiueuicnta i kuowu, aud the position of the new comet can lie readily computed from them by u-ing tho previous lueasiire ments. The position thus olitaincd.to gether with the direction of the comet' motion and its brightness, is immedi ately telegraphed to the Smithsonian Institute. '1 lie Institute telegiaplis to all tho Amcricau Observatories aud to f he Iloyal Observatory, at Greenwich, England, a which in it turu informs those if EuroM. A observation are thus muili; from dillcicut place, delays trom cloudy weather are diminished. The position determined ou three dif ferent evenings (although iu case of necessity an interval of a few hours cau Ik; used) gives suliicieut data to compute the comet's orbit. It may seem a bimple thing to discover a comct.birf it requires considerable skill and excellent eyesight. This straining the eye endeavoring to see such faint objects is a great tax ou vision. Pa tience, especially, has to lie cultivated, for one may cany on thi work for months, even for years, without bt-ins rewarded for his work by :!iy dis covery. l.ittilog-of tievenlj-Sli." The people of those time were re spectably clad. Their scores o cloth ing was abundant, many of the fabrics used were elegant, and the fashion of their dress was frequently very stately. Pantaloon were not yet iu vogue, but instead there were breeches ot leather, buckskin, worsted, homespun, stocki net, black and brown br.aili lotIi,iltish, and velvet for w inter; and for summer of linen, cotton, nankeen, white diuiily, and drilling. Dresscoats, sm touts,and great-coats were made of lear-skiu, buckskin, homespun, denim, wilton, broadcloth, velvet, audsagatiiy (:t kind of wrge): and cloaks of camlet, broad cloth, and kersey. Their vests w ere of linen, twilled cotton, diajKT, white dimity, serge, broadcloth, and velvet; their gloves of leather and varn; their hats of leir, castor, and velvet; their shuts of linen, cotton, homespun, and tow; their stockings of woolen, cotton, ami linucn. For itoots and shoes al most every household had iu hi house whole dicscd calf.kius and bides of sole and other leather. .Such were the materials ot which the garments of tiie meu of "Seventy-six'' were made, rind tbcv bespeak comfort in every casc.aud djgniueii icsjK'ctahility in most. The apparel of tho ladies was still more vaued, and exhibits their charac teristic love of gay colors and delicate fabrics. The asMUtmeiit presented in these old inventories is fairly bew ilder ntg. Judging by thein, llio ladies of those tho must have all considered caps and aprons indispensable to their toilets, the humblest among them hav ing lceu ossessois of au iudeliuito uumlier ot each, the former having been for the luo.-t part of cuiubnc, taffeta, inilliuet, gauze, and lineu, and the latter ot law u, lioll.uid-liuen, tatl eta, niusliu, inilliuet, down through the gamut to check, bo;ucsp;iu. aud toiv. 1'heir hats, Uiiiuets, and hood weie of beaver, satin, and bright-colored silks and velvet; their cloak of wor sted, broadcloth, camlet, gay-colored silks, white and black satin, purple and black aud blue velvet, aud especially ot brilliant scarlet tlaunel or cloth. Their dresses were formed of an end less variety of materials. The com mon short gown, which seems to have been generally atl'eeted w hen they were not iu full toilet, was of kersey, hol-land-liiieu, worsted, wilton, calamanco (astutf resembling prunella), check, homespun, linsey-wolsey. Their long gowns w ere of cheek, sti ipc d liome spun, ralico, 'iMuighteif calico, mus lin, chintz, outside chintz lined with calico, n lute hollamt. blue aud striped Holland, Ulack ana hi no uiiraut (the fabric known as "everlasting"), groset, bombazine, blue and black rtissel (a species of litisey-woolsey), moreen, poplin, French tabby, velvet, and of lutestring, white, ciimson, and other colored silks and satin. For the hand they wore gloves of thread, kuit stud's silk, and leather; their stockings were of thread, cotton, muslin, yam. linen, worsted, and silk; and their shoe were of cloth, prunella, calamanco, leather, aud silk. Shawls were of cloth, cash mere, and tatl'eta; handkerchief aud kerehiefs altoundcd iu their wardroU-s, aud were of linen, cambric, taffeta, muslin, gauzc.and Barcelona and other thin silks. Of petticoat ther supply w as inexhaustible, some ladies recount ing the loss of twelve, fifteen, and twenty of each.thc former having Iweu constructed ot homespun and muslin, but chietlv of tine five and six hundred linen, and the latter of linsey,tow,tlan uel, kersey, dimity, lioiubazine, and calamanco. -Harper's Magazine, Important to Scffehebs The great est benefactor is one who relieves pain aud cures disease. Dr. Silsbek has accomplished both by his miraculous discovery of Axakesis, an absolutely easy, rapid and infallible cure for Piles in all stages. All Doctors endorse it and 20,000 cured sufferers testify to its virtues. It is a simple suppository acting as an instrument, poultice and medicine. The relief is instant and cure certain. Price $1. Sent free by mail on receipt of price, Asaeesis De pot, id Walker St., Xew Tork. 2 All the year round, Sheridan's Cav airy Condition Powders should be given to horses tuat are ''kept up." To horses and cattle that graze in summer they should only be given in winter and spring. Officers and soldiers who served in the army, physicians, surgeons, and eminent men and women everywhere. join in recommending Johnson's Ano dyne Liniment to be the best internal and external family medicine ever in vented. That's onr experience. r, e . f,iol Adviser, in Plain Foilish, for all People, or Medicine Simplified, is me rompret"""" - pressive title of a forthcoming work of from r i i j ... ...m bound seven lo nine nuwirw ' in cloth, from to- pa of Dr. R- PI!.EC.,, of the World's Dispensary. Uuffalo. . 1. .'i fd ...1 to an address with- i rice i o, psi-f.-i --- j -- . ia the CniteJ States. To all those who subscribe for the work now. and send the money with their gubscription, the price wdl be but $1.00. The lauer price scarcely covers the cost of publication, and at it will be the cheap81 ok erer publls0ea' and the author can only hope for compensa- . . . i . l. n n .a ..Ia which lion ror his inoor in t "iu"-v . i - Tii ! hnr'i name is me wore, must "'" " 7 . a household word throughout America na ... , : : : - w,f HnL-nneB in his rame as a pnysiciu - , . 7 oiher lands. His reru'on. ouFle ."rll.n the cheapness of the work, insure for it in our opinion a sale surpassing that of any book that has ever been publiabed m l" English lamruige. The bo. k will be illus trated with numerous original wood engra Ting. will contain a fine steel portrait and autograph of the author, and altogether -.. t .L- . .nrehenalve. DlallllV Will oe me hiusi i . - written and r.ctical medical adviser lor both young and old, male and fcnalo, single and married, ever published. We advise each of our readers 10 send the subscrip tion price to me auiuor imn.'v - .l - . ;n i; luhnr and secure IQU9 euruuraicc uiui ihe wcrk'at the reduced price. The author . . . e.ll . ..k...tl f- will acknowledge tne receipt ui -r tijns an d send tie book as soon as out. ( arm nil Kinds of Catarrh. S i successful has Dr. Pierce's Golden M -did Discovery proven, as a consti-t-itu-t al treatment for Catarrh, when c ui.l. d with the use of Dr. Sage's Ca ti'r.h Uen1e.1v, applied locally by the us of Dr. Pierce's Xasal Douche (the 01.lv method of reaching the upper and back cavities of the bead.) that the pro prietor of these medicines has long oil. red a standing reward of S500 for a in.- of C-ttarr'u which he can not cure. The two medicines, with instrument, f..r i by druggists. A SPECIMEN OUT OF THOUSANDS. Id., April 29, 1873. Dr. Tieucs, B ilV.o. N Y. : Dt-at Sir It is with pleasure I make this statement to you that after taking medicine for twenty years for the Ca tarrh, 1 tried your "Catarrh Kemedy and effected a cure, so that it has not trou bled me fur two years. S. Wheeler. STEALING OUR THUXDEP Pcoule should beware of those impos tors who copy Dr. Pierce's original style of advertising, by offering various sized rewards for cases of Catarrh and other diseases which they can not cure. Those who do not poses sufficient in telligence to write an original advertise ment are not likely to have made great and valuable discoveries iu Medicine 6 A New DtPABTCUB. "Now Depar tures" are the order of the day, and none is more thoroughly entitled to the palm than the "new departure of Dr. J. Walker. This centlemun had t-tu- died medicine. He had studied the priaciples of the venerable allopathic school", and perceived its iucfficieEcy. Discarding this school, he analyzed homojjpatiiy and found it failed to achieve any ueeisive results, xne new fuugied Eclectic and Hydropathic sys tems also failed, and he legan a system of Botanical research. He found, not the philosopher's stone, but "nature's own niedieire" in Cdifornia herbs, and effortnally cured himself of a com plication of diseases pronounced by leading practitioners as incurable. He now g!ves to his fellow man the remedy used by himself Vinegar BirnsRS the Tutues off which are roven by its imineuse salt) throughout the inn J. Mdoy a poor sufferer iiow gt ya 'GoJ blefcs Dr. Walker's iiew departure " 61 Tape IVonu! Tape U onul Tape Wtnn Twnorf-d In from 9 to 3 bourn with harni c.ft.ijl medicine. Tne worm pMmT Inmi tiie tem alive. No -k.U uutil the utir wtrrii, itn iks-mm. Mfdirme hrnile-. Can refer tt.e ol ti t.i the r-iUcuts ui thm city whom I h.vt-uri. At my uili. e cjd wn huu-drtM-j of ffw-irn-ns. meaaurtnif from to Iwu feet in IratEL l-ify per r-it. ( cat-- of ..iiei.wu- and dutorv .tiirttioua of J.iter are cau-! by toiuai'b ami other w-n-iui rii-trni iu th ainuf Diary caiMi. W.nua.a dia!e "f the mo-tt dntfrouj ctirter, are o attic aiadfrtmxl ty the uitti. at meu of th tri-eut dar. Call aud e tbe ungical and ouIt worm dt:Kvr, or e id for a circu ar wiiu-ii wul afiieaftil drwriiti'm au-1 tr-atnuiu of adaiuitaf worms eacl-e a r-eut ataruu fur return of toe aiue. lT. k Kuakel can ted by a-Mitje thm pUieut whether or not, t:iey are troutwe-l wit a ori-A, aud ly writing and tilju, ttie tui"oai, Jt'., tUa iAKtor wul auer brtnali. VIL H. K. at.M.r.L, Nu ttt N. imb ViiiUDici.ri.ia, Pa. (iv.re atotnee or by mail, tree) &--, kux aud htoaiack wuru aiao cetuovou. A. il v e r t i s e m e n t . MLRCIIAKT'S iGARGLING OIL Siiiiud Liniment of id fjniteJ SiaT. 5 is ihii roii ; ... or. - SuiJt. A'Vw.a , r .: a .Vi, . ..y ' -- II;; It. W.i. , A nti. lys or '..wifrv j ',.it. I .! all 1 ..'. ' I t-ilrt ut At 1"M Lv.lc. ttrr '.tfK. 1 1 arc Mi. $1.00. SMiaa H. sil j (-malt sua ft.r Family lT. 23 eaala j Tt,. ,c Oil ha. W. i. o- a. a llo m-at J" ''"-' !l " a., la a i"ir truu, bul to. .Or. nd '..ow 0ltC'kait. ' . A.',': ''"- lr.iKiul n, dalT la Pal.al iJI..,lin f.,r .hi- of r Al nanaca, aad rad fcl.u it. .vU ... aUtal lb. ot. .l.r.l'... O.. I. I.,.,!, by .11 f.-pw,,.,. Im -r. lr..asa,jt 11,. 0j Ou. u.'.m.m:.', f- N3 , ,h. piMM j aad r auw(wa W. a ao aiauufactara Xrrrintai't) (Viirm lahl.. W d.-al fair acd i;l at m-lk alL aad ht 'crmt.-n l ctt ,a uaf.:i..j at Wkpurt, N. V., U. S. A., by j jifTf liara's (Janrlh: Oil Co., !U.:' HODC-2. Secretary. STATIOXART, POIiTABLE AXD AGRICULTURAL STEAM ErJC.MES. Oaaeral Agecla fur ECSSaLL 4 CO 'I Massiljon Separators HORSE POWERS. M HORSE RAKES, .rEn.cE-. HAY CUTTERS AND OTLTER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. MARBERT & RAYMOND, 1835 -Market Street -- "H!LaDELPHta. SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES I atl a Mm. Wmvh.u. I v.i . . pnrt-bn4. Henrly parked for ablpnin. COCKXfcKd, tain, ftHKLVIXO. STUBS FIX- fouhe ornce'f-injrtTritE an kind. ecundband a the City. i.kwis sic nno., a.it-i-ei. toa. hat ami uai kikuB av& fuiiaiipiii jod pmrjT.fwC XtalXX RIOCTU AT THIS OFT I XT. Advertisements. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. f .to.--..'" ' cwrf' It's atvnrcr. YES? Virai - ii s-llJ " U !rra lud'jKriua Bad f-.Ju3. a at:-t aiiti- Lttar ael K;a. it.u. .pi:if Tm'.-d Supply aai-ra ia Aaraiak th. araia of o -F",t tiuU toapn aeaiihj lairfa- W-. frn thoBai wia r uMrt thai a ar. u k- rrf.r--a " RE2ZTIE3 DSEB. Apart from our OSlc Practice. rnssz TilE GKEAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, Xtmt-n taa fasria matter fa ia M. nwn it U a knlikr MditM, SECOND. THE PINE TKEK TAR CORDIAL. I Asia m ft LiTr, 9ala U StmMk. aa. Mta M tk Kidaiji aad 8-rroua Bj far CaxtatT aivic, tall tr rlU OR. 1. Q. 0. WtSimBT, 332 JVtrl Sct SrtI. ADMONITION. a kt kmrwa to all iwaJ.ra Uai sibm lm LQ.fi WISHA&T kaj tWUc4 Us saaa. ms ar sLwmms, aad lk iraat -alas W TAft as a rmli tfcwJ. aa tfiiMta J BUL BriVy aai K. Joka Wlw, tkat mMJ ka' anropied U siakt a TAB. pr rtia Ut THROAT AND L0N0 1I5 .ASKS. kkai ba L.V.O. VISHABT? Pill ME TiB COSDIJl la Us nj Tmn.y. fron Uef (aperies, aajerf r ikillrul phjie;ani fsr Divtkcria, Clratsl Tkrs Luij. Si-faay, Stoaask. Aathma, aaf (teaera.1 Dtl.i'.itr. well M fr raus, Ci!i LhBg ffa. tte-ia DR. L. Q- C. W1SH.ART So. 232 N SECOND ST . p!5i!.i.rf s rut t. l'r. 4. t'iukfi-'s 4 ;:lil.;ri:i i Vi:i 3:ar KittCIS arc a ;. :. !- V.-ctj!-.e ;irci;iiati'.ii. ni:n'.i tliS l'i f;t :n i'.: tive Lcrbs l'unnd !i flu- Inwrr i tte Sierra Ncr:iiLi;:itiu:it;ii;isit ';iiif..r nia, the lucdn iit il j.ihi i li.s of ri!i-'a .ire cxtnirtcti iliiwfi'uui nitlnuit the u of Alcohol. Tho ii;'-.-:i.:i is almost iaily asked. "What is V.:: i:u;isc of the itipaniileled sut-cess of Vinegar Itir rEius?" Our answer is, that they remove :ho cause of disease, and the patient re covers his health They are the HMt blood purifier and a lifc-fiivinj juincip'.e, :l perfect Rcnovrit'ir anil 1 1: .orator if the system. Never U-fote in the uUturr of liie tit.rnl ii uiwiithie Im'j .oniiMmiulvil jtit.r:;-ii: the reiiti4rkab:e paiitica of VisKiiAE l;iiTtr..t iu t.eaiin taa fltk of every (U.-esi-e muu i heir to. Tlicy are a geutie Purati' e as well a a Tuuic. relieviii(r t'on;reii"U o stion o' he Liver aud Viae- ra. Organs, in ililioa- The prtpcrtiPs of Drt. Walker's Vixeoam Hitters are Ax ni ut, Diaihretie. Carminative, Nutritinas Laxative. Diuretic. Sedative. Counter-Irritant. Sudorific, Altera . nd Anti-Bilious. . II. HrlMltALn CO.. Ornnrlrta and tln. A jtn.. Snn Fmniseo. Calinimia, aad rxtr. 4f WnNhwLttm and thnritti St.. N. V. Sold bi- all Ilrvaulil and l alera. THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON SEWING MACHIE AWARDED Ths "Hsdal for Progress, it IT TIE5XA, 1SI3. VDt irn... . .. ""MI or JiEDAL AWaRblh II THE EXPOSITION. JVb Seiff JfticAhie Received a jjiffter 2'rize! A FEW GOOD RE tSOVSt 1. A S'eW fnrfntilm Tnnanrr.,. T anu securea Djr Letters Patent. .Makes a ptrfeet toes stitch, alike on both sides, oa all kind of foods. 3 . Run (.ii:h. n.iui.u V. i -. w..., .i au u Kapid text combination of qualities. "t'tiiiLi litint for years witheut Repairs. 6. Will Jo aU taritti,, of Work and Fane, lu m supvnur manner. 6. Is Mttmt taxil ltfwtmiJ W . 1. - - Length of sinch may be altered while run- can oe tnreaUed without p&Ksine thread thrmxrh hni. ". Design Simple, Ingenious, Elrjant, trv B "" -mjoui the a.e of Cog " heel Uears. Rntarw ri T .... a . j - " f mi aia. UkS the Automatic Oram F..J -l.;k . morm length of stitch at any speed. Has our new Thrtad Controller, which allows en-y noTement of needle-bar and prevents injury to thread. o. LossTaccnos most careful and ris- 1SUED. It ia mnnffiiH k. ,k. . skillful and experienced mechanics, at the eele- X- T. YAil fidephi Office, SO BLANKS BBATLJ mSTTD At THIS OfTKB. 0M Eugene Schoeninfa CZLEBRA via SWEDISH Bit TElts. OF PERUVIAN , m t Baalp tn tala littanwu feu. fapan wt Bwaadtik aliynaa, a a.,,,, faMt ala Ufa. w... 104 J.a .14 koraa. laid ra-lp. li.a aa4k,. -amt ky kla family for mor. Lha, -i! Darla all tala tl. th.y Bad. ft,, ttlara, wklak md.rad u.a i I!'1 P-opI. .nj.ra. ax. u, Orlf laally la. a.r. af Brapartaf a t . B.woadarfll .facta, was abiaiMd . "' kla. vkila -artl.ipat!.. i, a. Jk la. Spamlarfa U aa.rica, . , J la. MT-rM aiT!s. II Wat u tt. -alkalr. this ge:;cise Swedish b. u B I. aow kaa wiM't. kt la. aa, ata tkoaaaada Of I tltmta alraady flTa oa by waat ttftu urn fronti itaalf tntW a pov.tfa l -Wit ym.tTatl.a Bn.aT, tkat tf ts a tin fankar LaalTlaaal ta.aaia.atl i,' . u, . aaite HO? IT OPERA VE5. T ot tut SwMtik Bltt.r.,1,,,,,, Ik tral alar, ta tka .rT.ftk.4:aMn , ' Uroacb.at tktr aatira .ii.it, bu auiaijU at.taaak aaa th. T-atral trart. h a, faaMlaaa.a4 tbarafora, aMralEf ti, iai zlatUa tn(larttia ar nanu krBt0)1 rawattaaa af all t'.si, ar atopa Diatrtaa, .. tary, ar otfl.r aoataoloaa 4:ackarw ajT' By rafmlattaf U. abaomiaal rfa:a,,'r fmt UmrUkmit.!kanaanni!.a,l4ttaM loiBat af tka kaaaa kwiy , Iwaim k laca U.lfaiata. tka aarraj aaa tkj ti haraaaa tka aaaaaa aa tha lit.Il. a.waj. traabllac af tka ttaba. tk. artj:, u. kwKat aaaaa, at aalaa af tk atoma.k.'lajtrto (all. fanlUaa. aaa U aa aiMlleatr,,;.,, amdy aalatt ir?u IrrltabUltj, r.u l.acr, Ckalla, Worm a. Brop.y, ti If ukt a.abl hm, It 'rata. a. a an aiMnaa, ktt a a mU4 aa4 pa aJaa. wtr. Ik oata.ie af tk-a ;i!it! u, Blttar It kaa krnai ana af ti. aaa :tvj rraadiaa a(alaat 41a at tk orfaaa ,Ia,M la tk abaaaiaa, aad af as.toa that btMi aaa k'.aa la asaaqa.aca af aald diaaaai. tkai t, 41ak Bitura kaa aa aaaarpaiwd na n Iw aaxtac Ll.rCaaplalaUfl.taaaiat.JaaaUi Byapaaala. Dtaaidara af tka f la. ria araaa. af tk. Maaaral. aiaaoa. aad aia dlanttta tk. E'daara. f tka Crlaary aad fuaal-O-jtai, Balda thaaa Ik Sweditk Bl'.ura nr Qoa. aaai.tab a aar.au. or coigwira kfKtiau ! t:araaa. wktck r:iua:a fta diatarkaac, a Caadatio of At Ujja, ik Ban, aad ka Biataa Cja.La, l.loa, Blus, .r:,;a, ia -i iij.r.i.rt KJj Ctimaa aiUrsal R.aor kuUa aad T.'.n, 0t bw Saaarai D.'tlltT. Bypkaadnaau, auan..r, A... 4. Off r.at baarl: tk. 8aliak B'.tUn kw a:a t ea Ibna l ia tk. bf aaicg f Gutrlt tad : tarnmlttt at-Fa-ara. Bal thlala al7 on. 1(V of Ita !ataiM,)tt d frettrting i nue It rrjularlf tgmnst al aatarmattc aa i tpiitmic i.tas. Ta. I.rt.ik Bit:ra liaa j l.ac .xp.r1.af la aaa. Uv.owil aaaaa Batatalaaitta fraat raatwa W batog :k a rallaki rtHlETATITI tin FBOFBTlaCnC III bdt asi;rr Tjplm3, Crientil Pest, Siiip-Ferer, Yfllow-Fercr, ASIATIC CHOLERA. PjMtt . j, b1 thoUrv wr bob ppiiwatly Ua od ta lhlkt win by Froncli ud EnllU fkf itc.tas, waa. by prenb.ag th am i iir r PM iT tdK-jpa, aS4M4-tl is radadog ta ra ttj Ut f 4ala tM.vM rYoai U to I ft oL DIRECTIONS Wfu AU aaraoaa wka kara t arfora laog aad bard labor, aad wkll. duler ltaraoft.a'apoMdt aadd.a ahac af tampTlnr. or tb draft ar air, ar abnoxioua dasta. aa.l:a, r rapura, rkosid aal fal! t aaa ti. f w.d'.ik B;ttra. aa a law dropaal It, add.d to tk.lr drak, ar. aaSd.al to pp-tarr tk.a ta laatln.ab:a fc.altk aad vigor. Tkaaa .a ar. aca.toad t !rlak 1. watar daring tk aaa a.r, .aoaid aa.ar .alt la add Kal Sw.diak Bit lr. to it. Pron. rv.a t aad.ntary tifa abaald an tka.wa'lak Bittara .t will aaatra ia tkabnd at laeta of tk.lr waat aft x.rcia. la opaa air. aad harp th.m la god kaaltk aad good aplrlta. J- Ta tha Lad'ra tk Bw.dlak Blttar. ata pcU':y b ra.nmn.ndad. B can, ita im aoa Irtbat. aviU .t.ttallj to prr.a th. regularitf af tka pbTKlotoglcal fnactloaa. pveallarta th. dil .at f.ataia .oaatltntl.a aad tkaa proroa aa faetaal barri.r agaltitt tho lanaavrabl. Strrfltj aad Bloi-d Ditaaaaa, wbl.k aow-a-d.yt bar. grows aa fraqn.at. a t b lata by aaaj far aataral tak Itaac. W Bat tk 8w. dlk Bittara d a aotoa'7tni good kaaltk. It ala. .facta tka (all da..lopa.al af tka faatala bod 7. aad af Ua kaaatr by parfaal nrat aad taa oapltioa a-.d aotar. Tkaa tka B.adi.k Bitura kaa aaa at Ik afaat aad moat taalaal COSMETIC AXD TOILET AETICXE5. AV Taiaara aad tb.lr rall!a, wkn karaTiai Iwadlah Bittara. pr.f.r it W all alallar aruaaa Far tk.B It prea b.aacla: la .arton. .ava In Bummer, wbeath.tr a.llloj rqnlrt tt" a ft.a radar tka lalaaaa krat of tb. raa, wat . p aormtag bard work, th.p ar ladacd ta b aa taSdatlr raatloaa la aatitfTiag th-lr baralig thlrat l.y wator. or ta Bating frail aot j rpa St That fa, alog paopla ara .ry liabl. t. .fer froa aaa atrok, f.T.r, Dytnttru. CkuUra, Tbaragalaraaauf tk. gwaduk B:tunaakia daattaroa. tnlaenc. a'l harm!- In Winter, daring tk tim. of rail, rrtij !? paapla, trying to lada:nairy UmnliM l prl'alloaa, ar rary apt to .ft.a ...rload t ataaacha aad tkaa tmpair tl.dr d:.al. .r.aia tk r u f tka !'. Tb. .f th. Swadlik Stt ra praaaaU daara front :kl caata. Aa a a attar f oara. ta a. af al'taa pall.Bl akoald ar d food aot agnoing wllb fca raek.BaUvwa.tobad:Oea,t ul'iH1 aaltabla U twj)aa qnaattua Tb ral i aral " Hm e da," la Mriatj '.o b kBr.d. HOW TO TAKE SWEBISn EITITES Tka Iw.dtik Blttm aball a'y " abavaos aflalaBaatory ayaploaa. Gre.i paraoaa tab aaa tablarpeoafn! thr. tta darday, farraftr bmb s, pva ar dUawd watax. Farwaa aadar Sn inn. twtbtrl. .f tb-t -MaaT la .ca-balf S " an-qoar' Cbl draa rrmSyarapward'.aaJA''u" taaatity, r. aona artr.tn.! to tt.w toa, thos I . M ., . . m. 1. Q.lBf S" ilTiBitt aa aarb an p fcible. " " Blttar; tb-y nay .nbstitc:. a 'j aawall r not f calamaa but lh.arw!'' Uk BUt.r.; kania th. m ttjr.ottt!a it aw. Intk.i way amok ag f a baera U .aid aiy aod.rat.lf practlead. Paraoa. .n.d wltk dT.?.iB anit .at ' knad ar aa, ar fat or aalt a. - ta bat ahoald ara aod -rata aiareiaa la fr-a air .old if al! aadi" baag f a-aparatara, al lat.B?." 11 aad dnaktax. aad all aa.laa a.ata! siM". wklak tk-y will anatrlbnta larg. y la U. fr" IM af tk Swadl.k Blttar. ST. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers